Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries

To be truly useful, an index must be applicable universally without modification. The data presented in this article support the use of the standard DAI without modification to assess need for orthodontic treatment in both developing and industrialized countries. When students from Thailand, Austral...

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المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Naham C. Cons, Joanna Jenny, Frank J. Kohout, Yupin Songpaisan DDS, Dirawathana Jotikastira
مؤلفون آخرون: University of Iowa College of Dentistry
التنسيق: مقال
منشور في: 2018
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الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/15744
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spelling th-mahidol.157442018-06-14T16:16:48Z Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries Naham C. Cons Joanna Jenny Frank J. Kohout Yupin Songpaisan DDS Dirawathana Jotikastira University of Iowa College of Dentistry Mahidol University Chiang Mai University Dentistry Medicine To be truly useful, an index must be applicable universally without modification. The data presented in this article support the use of the standard DAI without modification to assess need for orthodontic treatment in both developing and industrialized countries. When students from Thailand, Australia, the German Democratic Republic, and Native Americans residing on Indian reservations rated the same 25 occlusal stimuli (photographs of dental configurations) for dental aesthetics, their ratings of these stimuli when arranged in rank order were highly correlated with those of US students. These 25 occlusal stimuli were a subset of the original 200 occlusal stimuli used in deriving the standard DAI regression equation. This article presents data indicating that when a Native American DAI was derived based on Native American ratings of the same 200 occlusal stimuli used in deriving the standard DAI, the Native American DAI and the standard DAI had the same ten components (orthodontic measurements) and strikingly similar regression coefficients (weights). Further analysis indicated that the two equations were sufficiently similar to justify using the standard DAI to obtain DAI scores on Native Americans and to estimate the relative social acceptability of their dental aesthetics. If ratings for dental aesthetics for the full set of 200 stimuli were available for each of the countries where only 25 were rated, we expect that, as in the case of Native Americans, a country‐specific DAI, if computed, would be sufficiently similar to the standard DAI that no modification would be needed to allow use of the standard DAI in that country. We conclude that the standard DAI could have utility in both developing and industrialized countries to assess need for orthodontic treatment. Copyright © 1989, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved 2018-06-14T09:13:46Z 2018-06-14T09:13:46Z 1989-01-01 Article Journal of Public Health Dentistry. Vol.49, No.3 (1989), 163-166 10.1111/j.1752-7325.1989.tb02054.x 17527325 00224006 2-s2.0-0024679178 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/15744 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=0024679178&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Dentistry
Medicine
spellingShingle Dentistry
Medicine
Naham C. Cons
Joanna Jenny
Frank J. Kohout
Yupin Songpaisan DDS
Dirawathana Jotikastira
Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries
description To be truly useful, an index must be applicable universally without modification. The data presented in this article support the use of the standard DAI without modification to assess need for orthodontic treatment in both developing and industrialized countries. When students from Thailand, Australia, the German Democratic Republic, and Native Americans residing on Indian reservations rated the same 25 occlusal stimuli (photographs of dental configurations) for dental aesthetics, their ratings of these stimuli when arranged in rank order were highly correlated with those of US students. These 25 occlusal stimuli were a subset of the original 200 occlusal stimuli used in deriving the standard DAI regression equation. This article presents data indicating that when a Native American DAI was derived based on Native American ratings of the same 200 occlusal stimuli used in deriving the standard DAI, the Native American DAI and the standard DAI had the same ten components (orthodontic measurements) and strikingly similar regression coefficients (weights). Further analysis indicated that the two equations were sufficiently similar to justify using the standard DAI to obtain DAI scores on Native Americans and to estimate the relative social acceptability of their dental aesthetics. If ratings for dental aesthetics for the full set of 200 stimuli were available for each of the countries where only 25 were rated, we expect that, as in the case of Native Americans, a country‐specific DAI, if computed, would be sufficiently similar to the standard DAI that no modification would be needed to allow use of the standard DAI in that country. We conclude that the standard DAI could have utility in both developing and industrialized countries to assess need for orthodontic treatment. Copyright © 1989, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved
author2 University of Iowa College of Dentistry
author_facet University of Iowa College of Dentistry
Naham C. Cons
Joanna Jenny
Frank J. Kohout
Yupin Songpaisan DDS
Dirawathana Jotikastira
format Article
author Naham C. Cons
Joanna Jenny
Frank J. Kohout
Yupin Songpaisan DDS
Dirawathana Jotikastira
author_sort Naham C. Cons
title Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries
title_short Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries
title_full Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries
title_fullStr Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries
title_full_unstemmed Utility of the Dental Aesthetic Index in Industrialized and Developing Countries
title_sort utility of the dental aesthetic index in industrialized and developing countries
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/15744
_version_ 1763497061414600704